45 Minn. 116 | Minn. | 1890
On November 5, 1880, defendant Williams, then in actual' possession of 200 acres of land under a contract for its pur
The appellant concedes that the transaction of November 5, 1880, in which Williams and his wife gave their warranty deed of the premises to Jones, and the latter executed and delivered to Williams his contract to reconvey, upon being paid the exact sum loaned by him, with interest, constituted a mortgage. But his counsel argues that, as this mortgage was in two parts, one the unconditional deed, the other the defeasance, the recording of the deed alone was abortive and of no avail as against subsequent good-faith purchasers or incumbrancers, or as against creditors with judgments duly docketed,
It was held in Benton v. Nicoll, supra, that a deed absolute in form, but a mortgage in fact, was properly recorded in a book kept for the recording of deeds, and that its defeasance — a bond in that
The case is remanded, with instructions to amend the judgment in accordance with these views.
Note. Amotion for a reargument of this case was denied January 8,1891.